Research

Scope and Content Note

The series consists predominantly of newspaper clippings and a small amount of memoranda, notes, and pamphlets documenting the department's response to changes in voting requirements, including introduction and administration of the Regents literacy test, and progress and results of literacy training offered through adult education classes throughout the state. The bulk of the records are in the form of a scrapbook of clippings, collected from local newspapers and pasted on paper, about the literacy test program.

The remainder of the series contains some unorganized files and clippings, apparently originating in the Education Department, concerning literacy testing, immigrant education, and rural education. Frank P. Graves was Commissioner of Education when the literacy testing began, and the department acted as the administrative arm of the Regents, which set policy.

The unorganized background files at the beginning of the series contain various unattributed and largely undated notes and memoranda. The material includes: instructions on how to judge a text book on English for adult immigrants; minutes of a meeting of America's Making, Inc., a committee (apparently organized by the Education Department) in charge of a festival and exhibit showing the achievements of immigrants and promoting national unity; material on how visiting school nurses could cooperate in immigrant education; memoranda about organizing adult education classes; posters announcing literacy tests; publications, from New York and other states, and memoranda about literacy testing, immigrant education, and rural education; and unbound, unarranged newspaper clippings dating 1922-1932 about the literacy test program in New York State.

The scrapbook articles were collected by a clipping service from newspapers all over the state. They date from 1922 to 1933, with the bulk of clippings dating prior to 1926. Each clipping is identified by date and name of newspaper. The clippings generally relate to developments in enacting the literacy test program, including: a drive to transfer the Board of Elections' power to administer the literacy test to the Education Department; accounts of the 1923 legislation and subsequent court decisions, especially the Court of Appeals affirmation of the "Steinberg Law on Literacy" entrusting the administration of literacy tests for new voters to the Board of Regents; announcements of scheduled dates and sites for testing and literacy classes (usually night school); reports on the numbers of people attending and passing the literacy test, sometimes listing names of those in the community who passed, or the percentages of those successful/unsuccessful; and advocacy work of the State Education Department and organizations such as the National Education Association to encourage enactment of the literacy test program nationwide (in 1924 the department estimated that 20 million Americans would fail a literacy test at the fifth grade level)